After the rush to acclaim Chelsea as title favourites in the wake of Saturday's stunning 6-0 demolition of Arsenal, Jose Mourinho's fall back to Earth could not have been less forgiving at Selhurst Park.

Crystal Palace and Tony Pulis, steeled by fear of relegation, were never going to be such conveniently open and fragile adversaries. They frustrated Chelsea and, though it would be overstating the case to suggest they took their opportunity when it arrived, a defender of the calibre of John Terry does not head into his own net unless under significant pressure.

Not a single man in a blue shirt lived up to his billing. Nemanja Matic endured his worst game since returning to Stamford Bridge, Branislav Ivanovic demonstrated once again that he is no right-back, Eden Hazard was strangely uninspired and Fernando Torres delivered the kind of inconsequential performance we have astonishingly come to expect from a man who once cost £50 million. Perhaps you cannot win this league with 10 players after all.After Chelsea's resounding 6-0 win over Arsenal last week, and Palace's last-minute defeat at Newcastle United, many expected a routine three points for Jose Mourinho's table-toppers, but the hosts upset the form book by recording their first league win over their London neighbours since 1990.

Mourinho was gushing in his praise of the Palace fans after the reverse fixture in December, and they were in fine voice once again on Saturday, particularly when Terry put through his own net in the 52nd minute.

Joel Ward whipped in a cross from the left-hand side, and as the Chelsea skipper challenged Joe Ledley, the ball glanced off his head and flew past Petr Cech.

It was a huge setback for Mourinho's men, who missed out on the chance to go four points clear at the top with fellow title contenders Liverpool and Manchester City still to play this weekend.

After a quiet opening to the game, Andre Schurrle squandered the first genuine opening in the 18th minute, prodding the ball wide from four yards after stretching to reach Cesar Azpilicueta's low cross at the back post.

The hosts had a chance of their own eight minutes later, Yannick Bolasie struggling to control a fizzing Jason Puncheon delivery before poking his effort into the side netting.

Palace then had two penalty shouts waved away in as many minutes as first Cameron Jerome tumbled under a challenge from Nemanja Matic before Bolasie pleaded with referee Lee Mason following a sliding tackle from Gary Cahill.

Terry scored at the wrong end shortly after the interval, heading Ward's cross beyond Cech at the near post under pressure from Ledley.

Chelsea almost levelled immediately, Julian Speroni diving full length to his left to keep out Eden Hazard's curling effort from the edge of the area.

As the game became more open, Puncheon's left-foot shot went narrowly wide of the post in the 62nd minute, before Terry nodded Oscar's free-kick just over the crossbar 60 seconds later.

Speroni was the hero once again 17 minutes from time, producing an incredible close-range save from Hazard to deny the Belgian what looked a certain goal, before Palace broke straight down the other end, only for Jerome to strike the outside of the post.

Ledley twice went close for the hosts in the final stages, but it mattered little as Palace held on for a surprise win to send Selhurst Park into raptures.